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1994 San Francisco 49ers season

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1994 San Francisco 49ers season
Head coachGeorge Seifert
Home fieldCandlestick Park
Results
Record13-3
Division place1st NFC West
Playoff finishSuper Bowl XXIX Champions
Uniform

The San Francisco 49ers 1994 season was their 49th season in the National Football League. For the third consecutive season, the 49ers led the league in points scored. The season was highlighted by their fifth Super Bowl victory, making themselves the first team to win five Super Bowls. A big turning point for the franchise was the signing of two-sport star Deion Sanders. Quarterback Steve Young suffered a heartbreaking loss to the Philadelphia Eagles which resulted in his being benched. An argument with George Seifert led to Young proving himself worthy of replacing Joe Montana as San Francisco's starting quarterback. The season would be one of the franchise's most successful seasons. Sanders would have an impact with the franchise by winning the NFL Defensive Player of the Year Award and having six interceptions. The 49ers opponents in the NFC Championship Game was the Dallas Cowboys. Dubbed by some fans as the real Super Bowl, it would mark the third consecutive season that the 49ers and Cowboys met each other in the game. It was one of the highest rated non-Super Bowl games in NFL history. The 49ers would go on to face the San Diego Chargers in Super Bowl XXIX.

NFL Draft

Pick # Team Player Position College
7 San Francisco 49ers Bryant Young Defensive Tackle Notre Dame
28 San Francisco 49ers William Floyd Running Back Florida State
53 San Francisco 49ers Kevin Mitchell Linebacker Syracuse

Regular season

In 1994, the team spent large amounts of money on the addition of several star free agents from other teams, including Ken Norton, Jr., Gary Plummer, Rickey Jackson, and Deion Sanders. Additionally, several rookie players made key contributions to the team, some becoming season-long starters such as defensive tackle Bryant Young, fullback William Floyd, and linebacker Lee Woodall. The 49ers had some tough times early in the season, including a 40-8 home loss to the Philadelphia Eagles, and a 24-17 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs, led by former 49ers quarterback Joe Montana. Following the Eagles game, a poll conducted on local sports radio station KNBR showed that an overwhelming majority of 49er fans wanted head coach George Seifert fired.

The game against the Eagles was a turning point for the 49ers despite the lopsided score. Young was benched in the 3rd quarter and was later seen livid on the sidelines, shouting profanities at head coach George Seifert. The following week in Detroit, the 49ers trailed the Lions 14-0. After throwing a pass, Young was hit, picked up, and driven into the ground by three Lions defenders. After the hit, Young was screaming with his face dark red in color. He crawled most of the way off of the field before refusing help from the trainers as he limped the remaining way off the field. He miraculously returned to the field one play later (NFL rules state that after trainers attend to an injured player, that player must leave the field for at least one play) to lead the 49ers to a 27-21 victory. The team rallied around Young to win 10 straight games, including a 21-14 victory over the two-time defending Super Bowl champion Dallas Cowboys. During that span, the 49ers' average margin of victory was nearly 20 points per game.

Throwback uniforms

During the 1994 season, many NFL teams wore "throwback uniforms" on occasional games (after week 2 of the season) to celebrate the NFL's 75th anniversary (a corresponding diamond 75th Anniversary patch was also worn by all teams) . The 49ers chose to wear a version of their 1955 uniforms as their throwbacks, with simpler sans-serif block numerals that were outlined and shadowed in black (the smaller TV numerals above the shoulder stripes however, were removed). White pants with thinner red-black-red striping were also worn, along with the old striped red socks (the team later reverted to their regular solid red socks after receiving permission from the NFL to wear the uniforms for the rest of the season). The regular 1989-95 design gold helmet was worn with this uniform, as there was no logo on the 1955 helmet, (which was plain white/silver).

The team first donned the 1955 throwback uniforms during their week 3 match against the Los Angeles Rams and the following week at home versus the Saints, with both being wins (coincidentally, these were also the first two games Deion Sanders played with the 49ers after signing on as a free-agent after week 2). The team then suffered an embarrassing 40-8 loss to the Philadelphia Eagles at home wearing their regular red uniforms with gold pants, with Steve Young angrily being benched to prevent him getting injured. For the subsequent three games until their BYE week, the team again was scheduled to play games wearing the throwback uniforms with white pants and dropshadows, and all three games resulted in wins. As the 49ers embarked during the following weeks on what would eventually be a 10-game winning streak that ultimately culminated in a Super Bowl XXIX victory, the team (prompted both by the superstition of then coach George Seifert, as well as the preference of players) petitioned the NFL to wear the throwback uniforms for the rest of the season, which was granted. The switch to solid red socks after the BYE week marked this occurrence. In all the team went 15-1 (including the playoffs) wearing the 1955/1994 throwback uniforms, (the only loss being the regular season finale on the road at Minnesota, with the team wearing white jerseys and resting most of their starters for the playoffs). Meanwhile the 49ers went undefeated wearing the red jerseys of the throwback uniform. After winning Super Bowl XXIX however, the team was compelled to revert to wearing its regular 1964-style uniforms (1991 revised design) for the following 1995 season.

Schedule

Week Date Opponent Result Stadium Record TV Time
1 September 5, 1994 (Mon) Los Angeles Raiders W 44-14 Candlestick Park 1-0 ABC 9:00pm
2 September 11, 1994 Kansas City Chiefs L 17-24 Arrowhead Stadium 1-1 Fox 1:00pm
3 September 18, 1994 Los Angeles Rams W 34-19 Anaheim Stadium 2-1 Fox 4:15pm
4 September 25, 1994 New Orleans Saints W 24-13 Candlestick Park 3-1 Fox 4:15pm
5 October 2, 1994 Philadelphia Eagles L 8-40 Candlestick Park 3-2 Fox 4:15pm
6 October 9, 1994 Detroit Lions W 27-21 Pontiac Silverdome 4-2 Fox 1:00pm
7 October 16, 1994 Atlanta Falcons W 42-3 Georgia Dome 5-2 Fox 1:00pm
8 October 23, 1994 Tampa Bay Buccaneers W 41-16 Candlestick Park 6-2 Fox 4:15pm
9 BYE WEEK
10 November 6, 1994 Washington Redskins W 37-22 RFK Stadium 7-2 Fox 1:00pm
11 November 13, 1994 Dallas Cowboys W 21-14 Candlestick Park 8-2 Fox 4:15pm
12 November 20, 1994 Los Angeles Rams W 31-27 Candlestick Park 9-2 ESPN 8:15pm
13 November 28, 1994 (Mon) New Orleans Saints W 35-14 Louisiana Superdome 10-2 ABC 9:00pm
14 December 4, 1994 Atlanta Falcons W 50-14 Candlestick Park 11-2 Fox 4:15pm
15 December 11, 1994 San Diego Chargers W 38-15 Jack Murphy Stadium 12-2 Fox 4:15pm
16 December 17, 1994 (Sat) Denver Broncos W 42-19 Candlestick Park 13-2 NBC 4:00pm
17 December 26, 1994 (Mon) Minnesota Vikings L 14-21 Metrodome 13-3 ABC 9:00pm

Standings

NFC West
W L T PCT PF PA STK
San Francisco 49ers 13 3 0 .813 505 295 L-1
Atlanta Falcons 7 9 0 .438 317 385 W-1
New Orleans Saints 7 9 0 .438 348 407 W-1
Los Angeles Rams 4 12 0 .250 286 365 L-7

Playoffs

NFC Divisional Playoff

San Francisco 49ers 44, Chicago Bears 15
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Bears 3 0 01215
49ers 7 23 7744

at Candlestick Park, San Francisco

Scoring Summary

1st Quarter

CHI- Kevin Butler 39 yard field goal CHI 3-0

SF- William Floyd 2 yard rush (Doug Brien kick)SF 7-3

2nd Quarter

SF- Brent Jones 8 yard pass from Steve Young (kick failed)SF 13-3

SF- William Floyd 4 yard rush (Doug Brien kick)SF 20-3

SF- Doug Brien 36 yard field goal SF 23-3

SF- Steve Young 6 yard rush (Doug Brien kick)SF 30-3

3rd Quarter

SF- William Floyd 1 yard rush (Doug Brien kick)SF 37-3

4th Quarter

CHI- Jim Flanigan 2 yard pass from Erik Kramer (pass failed)SF 37-9

SF- Adam Walker 1 yard rush (Doug Brien kick)SF 44-9

CHI- Lewis Tillman 1 yard rush (pass failed) SF 44-15

NFC Championship Game

San Francisco 49ers 38, Dallas Cowboys 28
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Cowboys 7 7 7728
49ers 21 10 7038

at Candlestick Park, San Francisco

Scoring Summary

1st Quarter

SF- Eric Davis 44 yard interception return (Doug Brien kick)SF 7-0

SF- Ricky Watters 29 yard pass from Steve Young (Doug Brien kick)SF 14-0

SF- William Floyd 1 yard rush (Doug Brien kick)SF 21-0

DAL- Michael Irvin 44 yard pass from Troy Aikman (Chris Boniol kick)SF 21-7

2nd Quarter

SF- Doug Brien 34 yard field goal SF 24-7

DAL- Emmitt Smith 4 yard rush (Chris Boniol kick)SF 24-14

SF- Jerry Rice 28 yard pass from Steve Young (Doug Brien kick)SF 31-14

3rd Quarter

DAL- Emmitt Smith 1 yard rush (Chris Boniol kick)SF 31-21

SF- Steve Young 3 yard rush (Doug Brien kick)SF 38-21

4th Quarter

DAL- Michael Irvin 10 yard pass from Troy Aikman (Chris Boniol kick)SF 38-28

Super Bowl XXIX

San Francisco 49ers 49, San Diego Chargers 26
Quarter 1 2 34Total
Chargers 7 3 8826
49ers 14 14 14749

at Joe Robbie Stadium, Miami, Florida

  • Date: January 29, 1995

Scoring summary

1st Quarter

  • SF - Jerry Rice 44 yard pass from Steve Young (Doug Brien kick) SF 7-0
  • SF - Ricky Watters 51 yard pass from Steve Young (Doug Brien kick) SF 14-0
  • SD - Natrone Means 1 yard run (John Carney kick) SF 14-7

2nd Quarter

  • SF - William Floyd 5 yard pass from Steve Young (Doug Brien kick) SF 21-7
  • SF - Ricky Watters 8 yard pass from Steve Young (Doug Brien kick) SF 28-7
  • SD - John Carney 31 yards SF 28-10

3rd Quarter

  • SF - Ricky Watters 9 yard run (Doug Brien kick) SF 35-10
  • SF - Jerry Rice 15 yard pass from Steve Young (Doug Brien kick) SF 42-10
  • SD - Andre Coleman 98 yard kickoff return (*Mark Seay pass from Stan Humphries) SF 42-18

4th Quarter

  • SF - Jerry Rice 7 yard pass from Steve Young (Doug Brien kick) SF 49-18
  • SD - Tony Martin 30 yard pass from Stan Humphries (Alfred Pupunu pass from Stan Humphries) SF 49-26

(*)The Chargers became the first team to have a successful two-point conversion in the Super Bowl. This was the first season in which the NFL allowed 2 point conversions, and the Chargers actually had two in the game.

Roster

Quarterbacks

Running Backs

Fullbacks

Wide Receivers

Tight Ends

Offensive Linemen

Defensive Linemen

Linebackers

Defensive Backs

Special Teams

Reserve Lists
  • Currently vacant

Awards and honors

Milestones

  • Jerry Rice, 100 reception season (Rice finished the season with 112 receptions) [2]
  • Jerry Rice, 1,000 yard receiving season

References

  1. ^ http://www.maxwellfootballclub.org/content/awards/bell/past_bell.htm
  2. ^ NFL 2001 Record and Fact Book, Workman Publishing Co, New York,NY, ISBN 0-7611-2480-2, p. 440
Preceded by Super Bowl Champions
San Francisco 49ers

1994
Succeeded by